Airbus, Air New Zealand to Jointly Study Hydrogen Aircraft Feasibility
16 September 2021 - 6:34AM
Dow Jones News
By Stephen Wright
WELLINGTON, New Zealand--Airbus SE and Air New Zealand Ltd. have
agreed to jointly research the feasibility of operating a
hydrogen-fueled aircraft by the end of this decade.
Air New Zealand has said it aims to have a so-called zero-carbon
plane in its domestic fleet by 2030, and is exploring both hydrogen
and electric options.
Airbus, which has been exploring three hydrogen-powered aircraft
concepts, said the joint study would help it understand the
practical challenges of putting an aircraft powered by a renewable
energy source into service. Air New Zealand would assess the
possible impact that a hydrogen aircraft would have on its network,
operations and infrastructure.
As governments ramp up efforts to meet targets for reductions in
carbon emissions, transport industries and aviation in particular
are likely to face increased pressure from investors, regulators
and their customers to decrease reliance on fossil fuels.
Air New Zealand has 51 turbo prop planes that it uses on
regional New Zealand routes and about half of them--Bombardier Q300
planes--have an average age of 14.5 years and will need to be
replaced after 2030.
"This agreement brings us a step closer to seeing low-carbon
solutions in place for our shorter domestic and regional flights in
the next decade," the airline said.
For long-haul routes, the airline is exploring fuels with lower
carbon emissions.
Write to Stephen Wright at stephen.wright@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
September 15, 2021 16:19 ET (20:19 GMT)
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